Hi everyone,
My name is Valent Turkovic. 

Between 2015 and 2018 I ran the MeshPoint project – a simple, rugged Wi-Fi 
hotspot designed to work in the toughest conditions.

During the refugee crisis in Croatia we deployed these boxes in camps and 
transit centers, providing internet to humanitarian organizations (Red Cross, 
UNICEF, IOM, Greenpeace, and many smaller NGOs) and helping over 500,000 people 
stay connected. We also used them in flood response and other emergencies. The 
project even won “Best Humanitarian Tech of the Year” at The Europas in 2016. 

Unfortunately, financial issues forced me to pause the project after 2018 (I 
was self-funding this and burned all my savings and due to stress I had long 
term healt issues).

Over the years I’ve stayed in touch with first responders from WFP, UNICEF, Red 
Cross, and various NGOs. The feedback is always the same: when disaster strikes 
(earthquakes, floods, or situations like in Ukraine), teams still struggle to 
get reliable communication up quickly. In many cases they need a simple mesh 
network that works in minutes, not hours or days, and runs on battery when 
power is out.

I know that in active conflict zones Wi-Fi can be jammed (e.g., for drone 
control), but there are countless other scenarios—evacuation centers, field 
hospitals, flood-affected villages—where a fast, robust, easy-to-deploy Wi-Fi 
mesh makes all the difference for coordination, family contact, and medical 
data sharing.

That’s why I’m restarting MeshPoint V2 – updated hardware with better battery 
life and simpler deployment, still focused on crisis response and off-grid 
communities.In the original MeshPoint I used Babel and was very happy with how 
fast and reliable it was for small-to-medium networks. But in larger, 
spread-out, or highly mobile setups typical for crises, I've seen scaling and 
resource limits that make it harder to rely on in the field.

First of all – a big thank you to Juliusz and all Babel contributors. Even if 
you didn't know it, your work directly helped improve (and sometimes save) 
lives in real crisis situations. 

I, and all the people who stayed connected thanks to those deployments, are 
truly grateful.I'm curious if anyone here is working on (or aware of) 
approaches that try to combine:
- Babel’s fast convergence and IP-native routing
- BATMAN-adv-style seamless mobility
- Better large-scale behaviour for hundreds-to-thousands of nodes in sparse or 
battery-constrained setups

If something like that exists or is in progress, I'd love to connect and 
exchange ideas (or avoid reinventing the wheel).

Thanks in advance!

Valent Turkovic
https://www.meshpointone.com

Technical specifications (old version, for reference): 
https://www.meshpointone.com/technical-specifications/

_______________________________________________
Babel-users mailing list
[email protected]
https://alioth-lists.debian.net/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/babel-users

Reply via email to